Exhaust or get tired through overuse or great strain or stress.
Sinônimos
Examples for "wear"
Examples for "wear"
1The ready-to-wear clothes industry, New York's major industry, is almost exclusively Jewish.
2Wrap dresses are easy to wear and hide all your problem areas.
3She asserts, quite trenchantly, her right to wear trousers on State occasions.
4I wish people would wear them from a voluntary basis, she said.
5Ultimately, of course, what you wear on your bike is personal choice.
1Factor in plenty of sea days: they're important for recharging weary batteries.
2Even in strike-weary France, the work stoppage is affecting Euro Disney stock.
3There was no respite for a weary looking London stock market yesterday.
4The weary government keeps control from the centre of the vast city.
5Not really horsemen, he decided, but tired men leading their weary animals.
1She's noted that 'pandemic fatigue' is affecting many citizens at the moment.
2Workers have voiced concerns that fatigue levels are putting safety at risk.
3However, fatigue prevented four subjects from group P from completing the trial.
4He said in recent media interviews that he had suffered from fatigue.
5Multivariate regression methods were used to identify significant factors associated with fatigue.
1Half an hour later, he reported for work at the tire plant.
2Goodyear previously said it would discontinue consumer tire production at the plant.
3Goodyear sold its North American farm tire business to Titan in 2005.
4For instance, I am no longer permitted to change a punctured tire.
5The result is a cacophony of engine noise, tire squeal, and numbers.
1And a jade platter of dainty food calls for a million coins.
2Swiftly Peggy stooped and unfastened the little jade god from far-off China.
3She had served the tin gods in temples of gold and jade.
4The great giraffe seal of pink jade was also displayed to advantage.
5Somewhere in the final issue, Lady Stardust should wear a jade dress.
1You know, in case TMZ is having a fag break or something.
2It is late September at the fag end of the tourism season.
3They said that the whole world would know he was a fag.
4Albert dropped his fag and stood on it on the way in.
5They smoked fag after fag, lighting the new ones on the butts.
1A pair of gauntlets will outwear three or four pairs of gloves.
2See, the organ-constricting, bone-crunching corset as an underwear-as-outwear look is NOT for everyone.
3Such a worm gear will, I fancy, outwear a dozen of the scientific sort.
4Insulated by thermal outwear and whiskey, Roe's isolated professor is tellingly exploring the void.
5Same footwear rules as women apply and denim, tracksuits, leggings, casual outwear are also banned.
1The scores helped wear down the challenge of the relegation-threatened home team.
2Given enough time, my battle cruisers can probably wear down that battleship.
3After several minutes of kicking and scratching, she began to wear down.
4They've adopted a guerrilla policy to try and wear down our fleet.
5But time and change soon wear down these first fancies of youth.
1He was without the helmet and body covering they wear upon the exterior.
2The perversity of things, animate and inanimate, was beginning to wear upon him.
3We often hear how our modern appliances wear upon our nerves.
4But what means this scarf which you wear upon your shoulder?
5The bodily exertion had begun to wear upon him during the last few minutes.
1He must tire out the Frenchman in the end, he thought.
2Most of these remakes tire out at the box office before they arrive.
3For you won't tire out my patience, or break my heart.
4The wrappings and trappings often tire out the hapless viewer before the main event.
5I'd tire out all the judges and juries in London.
1And so you wear out your eyesight in the working of chairs.
2The toil was fitted to wear out the strongest of his men.
3Running less than an hour, the film doesn't wear out its welcome.
4Gee, but he does wear out the engines in his cars, Whitney.
5So ladies and gentlemen, we're going to wear out some shoe leather.
1Archie grabbed a fag out of her packet and lit up.
2Jack stubbed his fag out viciously against the table.
3Jack fished another fag out of the pack.
4Biddy, wait,-girlshave no innings-girlsonly fag out.
5This one blacked his shoes: that toasted his bread, others would fag out, and give him balls at cricket during whole summer afternoons.
6There was the tree under which the bully licked you: here the ground where you had to fag out on holidays, and so forth.
7He must be exhausted, and as they say here, all fagged out.
8Buller's horse was as jaded and as fagged out as its rider.
9My last partner weighed a ton, at least, and I'm fagged out.
10The younger man was fagged out and in a good deal of pain.
11He's been riding all day and he is completely fagged out.
12I think the little fool was just about fagged out, and no wonder.
13He was fagged out and hungry, and felt that luck was against him.
14They put their fags out and got up from the table.
15Archie pulled a packet of fags out of his pocket and lit one.
16Finally, at a quarter before five o'clock, the House adjourned, quite fagged out.
Esta colocação é formada por: